WASHINGTON, Sept. 25, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Friday, Nov. 22, the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the Newseum will host JFK Remembrance Day, featuring a number of special events and exclusive programs. The news museum, a top attraction in Washington, D.C., will host a daylong series of JFK-themed discussions with authors, journalists and filmmakers. The museum also will rebroadcast in real time three hours of CBS News's live television coverage from Nov. 22, 1963, including the unforgettable moment when legendary anchorman Walter Cronkite reported to the nation that the president was dead.

JFK Remembrance Day at the Newseum will feature an interview with historian James Swanson, author of the new book "End of Days: The Assassination of John F. Kennedy"; a screening of "JFK: One PM Central Standard Time," a new documentary on the assassination narrated by George Clooney; a discussion with Dean Owen, author of the book "November 22, 1963: Reflections on the Life, Assassination, and Legacy of John F. Kennedy"; and a screening of "President Kennedy Has Been Shot" followed by a discussion with filmmaker Gerardine Wurzburg. All events are included with museum admission. A complete schedule is available at newseum.org.

As the agent assigned to protect Jacqueline Kennedy during the president's trip to Dallas, Hill was in the presidential motorcade and leapt onto the back of the presidential limousine moments after the shots were fired. In 1963, Schieffer was a reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, and on the day of the assassination he drove the mother of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald to the Dallas police station after she called the newspaper asking for help. The program takes place at 7 p.m. on Nov. 20, and tickets will go on sale to the general public Oct. 7 for $30. Newseum Press Pass members can purchase their tickets beginning Oct. 1 for $20.

These events, plus additional Inside Media programs leading up to the anniversary, add to the museum's popular JFK exhibits, which opened in April as part of a year-long exploration of President John F. Kennedy. Two exhibits and an original documentary chronicle the presidency, family life and death of America's 35th president through rarely seen artifacts, photos and video, and recount how journalists covered one of the darkest days in American history.

The exhibits include "Creating Camelot: The Kennedy Photography of Jacques Lowe," featuring intimate, behind-the-scenes images of Kennedy, his wife, Jacqueline, and their children, Caroline and John. Lowe was 28 when he met the Kennedys in 1958 and was hired as the family's personal photographer. Over the next three years, he shot more than 40,000 images of the couple and their children. Lowe's photos span from Kennedy's 1958 U.S. Senate re-election campaign through his early years in the White House. The iconic images helped create the mythology about the Kennedy years that later became known as Camelot.

"Three Shots Were Fired" examinesthe events that began with Kennedy's assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. It features never before publicly displayed artifacts on loan from the National Archives and Records Administration, including the long-sleeve shirt Lee Harvey Oswald was wearing when he was arrested, the wallet Oswald was carrying at the time of his arrest and its contents, a jacket investigators believe Oswald discarded as he was fleeing police, and the blanket Oswald used to hide his rifle in the garage of a family friend near Dallas. The exhibit also features the Bell & Howell 8 mm movie camera used by Abraham Zapruder, the only eyewitness to capture the entire assassination on film.

The Newseum's original film "A Thousand Days" recounts the youthful glamour the Kennedy family brought to the White House and the newsworthy moments of a presidency cut short. The 16-minute film is shown in the Newseum's Smith Big Screen Theater, a 120-seat theater featuring a 100-foot-wide screen.

Nikon is the exclusive sponsor of the "Creating Camelot" exhibit. Premier sponsorship support for "Three Shots Were Fired" has been provided by Altria Group and CBS.

About the NewseumThe mission of the Newseum is to champion the five freedoms of the First Amendment through education, information and entertainment. One of the top attractions in Washington, D.C., the Newseum's 250,000-square-foot news museum offers visitors a state-of-the-art experience that blends news history with up-to-the-second technology and hands-on exhibits, and its Newseum Institute serves as a forum for the study, exploration and education of the First Amendment. The Newseum is a 501(c)(3) public charity funded by generous individuals, corporations and foundations, including the Freedom Forum. For more information, visit newseum.org or follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

About the National ArchivesThe National Archives and Records Administration is an independent Federal agency that preserves and shares with the public records that trace the story of our nation, government, and the American people. From the Declaration of Independence to accounts of ordinary Americans, the holdings of the National Archives directly touch the lives of millions of people. The National Archives carries out its mission through a nationwide network of archives, records centers, and Presidential Libraries, and online at www.archives.gov. National Archives holdings include the JFK Assassination Records Collection that consists of more than five million pages of assassination-related records, photographs, motion pictures, sound recordings and artifacts (approximately 2,000 cubic feet of records). Online at www.archives.gov/research/jfk/.